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The word there'll is a contraction, a shortened form of the pronoun 'there' and the verb (or auxiliary verb) 'will', used to express the future tense of a main verb.
The contraction functions as the subject and verb (or auxiliary verb) of a sentence or a clause.
Note: The word "there" is a pronoun only when it introduces a sentence or a clause. The word "there" also functions as an interjection, an adverb, and a noun. The noun "there" is a word for a place.

Examples:
There will be rain this afternoon.
OR
There'll be rain this afternoon.

I wonder if there will be practice today.
OR
I wonder if there'll be practice today.

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Wiki User

6y ago
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AnswerBot

1w ago

"Is" is a verb, while "verb" and "noun" are both nouns.

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Q: Is there'll a verb or a noun?
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